Pages

Short Stories, Irish literature, Classics, Modern Fiction and Contemporary Literary Fiction, The Japanese Novel and post Colonial Asian Fiction, Yiddish Literature, The Legacy of the Austro-Hungarian Empire and quality historical novels are some of my Literary Interests

Monday, December 4, 2017

“The Red Bow” - A Short Story by George Saunders - April 21, 2009, in Esquire

In December we plan to post on at least four 21st Century American Short Stories and four Yiddish Stories. In January we are planning to pair Bolivian and Iraqi stories. If this works we will continue this through 2018, maybe from now on.

This morning’s story is by George Saunders, author of Lincoln in the Bardo, Booker Prize Winner for 2017 and several collections of short stories. (You can find lots of information on his webpage, linked above.) There are a number of very interesting conversations and talks with him on YouTube, I especially enjoyed his conversations with Karen Russell.

“Kill every dog, every cat, she said very slowly. Kill every mouse, every bird. Kill every fish. Anyone objects, kill them too.” - from “The Red Bow”

“The Red Bow” is set in a vilage, we don’t learn where. We know it is close to now as one of The characters checks their E Mail.

A vilage child has been killed by a dog. Panic spreads and in the very moving opening scene the Family whose daughter was killed shoots their other four dogs, animals like Family to them. They are not rabid, no one knows how they got sick and really there is no evidence they are. In a vilage meeting they vote to kill all The dogs and for extra safety the cats also. This is all caused by the death of the one girl, based only on an irrational fear.

To me this seemed like a fable about predjudice, if one of millions of a race is a criminal, then they all are. We see this attitude sadly spreading in American and Europe now. If you look back to what happened to Yiddish speakers this story may have a deeper impact.

No comments:

Currently Reading

Publicists and authors-if you would like The 100,000 monthly visitors to The Reading Life to know of a work please contact us

at

Rereadinglives@gmail.com

The Reading Life is a multicultural book blog, committed to Literary Globalism

Guest Posts are welcome

Your comments on all posts are very much appreciated.

"I read, much of the Night, and go south in the Winter"

Mel u

Editor, Founder, Curator of The Reading Life

Lakeview International Journal of Literature and the Arts- Advisory Director

Ambrosia Bousweau -European Director

“And she reads . . . day and night she reads. And she reads with passion . . . with excitement . . . as if she were searching for lost treasures, forfeited riches, and holy things impossible to recover; the wrinkles deepen on her high brow . . . her eyes become more doleful . . . more pensive” . . . Yente Serdatzky